Debut of the Ableton NJ User’s Group

October 13, 2009

Tomorrow night I’ll be at the first Ableton NJ user’s group in Red Bank. I’ll be brining the Ohm64 and Block controller, and Moldover will be doing a special workshop. Details below.

10-18-2009, 7pm-10pm

PlayShop & Performance
Debut of the Ableton NJ User’s Group

Come and spread the Ableton love at the first meeting of the Jersey Shore Ableton User Group – New Jersey’s one and only – and meet Controllerism pioneer and Ableton superhero Moldover. Hosted by multi-media guitarist and Live evangelist Chris Buono, this initial meeting will be a relaxed affair where members can come and brainstorm future meeting fodder. Between conversations, participants will have the opportunity to get their groove on courtesy of Moldover’s Octamasher, while picking the great one’s brain one-on-one on just how he came up with that contraption that houses his debut CD.

21+, free , RSVP

The Downtown Cafe
10 West Front St.
Red Bank, NJ
08753
732-741-2828

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Announcing the Birth of Block

October 12, 2009
I made my first controller in 1999 out of plywood, a hacked computer keyboard, and anything else I could find at the time at my local Radio Shack. It looked pretty sad and I used it to run visuals using Director and I called it the Editar.

I made my first controller in 1999 out of plywood, a hacked computer keyboard, and anything else I could find at the time at my local Radio Shack. It looked pretty sad and I used it to run visuals using Director and I called it the Editar.

First Viditar

A year later I made a newer version of it with plexiglass, added MIDI, started using Max/MSP (with a little help from nn and Nato), and renamed it the Viditar.

Shortly after this image Wired piece I hooked up with Peter to help with the software, and met Travis at a show while opening for Stone Sour in Houston, and Livid was created (in theory at least). We started making controllers together at that point, but simply for my performing, and in 2003 we officially started Livid. After a few years of prototyping and software development we built up our own manufacturing shop in Austin, Texas where we make everything with the same kind of tools and care you would see at a guitar manufacturing shop.
We are very pleased to announce the birth of block, our latest product in our line of real instrument grade control surfaces. Block is the little sister of the Ohm64 controller, housed in a compact ‘block’ and fits into a backpack. I actually did a demo last weekend in Brooklyn at Moldover’s release party and put it in my backpack with my laptop. Block will be available Nov 1st for $399 USD. More I made my first controller in 1999 out of plywood, a hacked computer keyboard, and anything else I could find at the time at my local Radio Shack. It looked pretty sad and I used it to run visuals using Director and I called it the Editar.details here.

jayviditarwired2large

A year later I made a newer version of it with plexiglass, added MIDI, started using Max/MSP (with a little help from nn and Nato), and renamed it the Viditar.

Shortly after this Wired piece I hooked up with Peter to help with the software, and met Travis at a show while opening for Stone Sour in Houston, and Livid was created (in theory at least). We started making controllers together at that point but simply for my performing, and in 2003 we officially started Livid. After a few years of prototyping and software development we built up our own manufacturing shop in Austin, Texas where we make everything with the same kind of tools and care you would see at a guitar manufacturing shop.

We are very pleased to announce the birth of block, our latest product in our line of real instrument grade control surfaces. Block is the little sister of the Ohm64 controller, housed in a compact ‘block’ and fits into a backpack. I actually did a demo last weekend in Brooklyn at Moldover’s release party and put it in my backpack with my laptop. Block will be available Nov 1st for $399 USD. More details here.

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What mood is your Ohm64 in?

October 11, 2009

Our engineer Brian was feeling too Blue is Seattle so he had us make an Ohm64 with yellow led’s to brighten his day. This gives us some new exciting options to our controller builds. Although we do not have a supply of non-blue led’s yet, we look forward to building controllers with orange, yellow, red, and green led’s. Check it out. You can see the cool possibilities here. Let us know what colors would be cool.

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Ohm64 Native Kontrol

October 8, 2009

The Native Kontrol Presets are now available for the Ohm64.

nativeKONTROL omComponent Series is a collection of Presets for Livid Instruments Ohm64 that transform the Ohm into an advanced control surface for Ableton Live.

YouTube Preview Image YouTube Preview Image

These presets are available at Nativekontrol.com

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Controllerism and Moldover

October 7, 2009

I’ll be demoing tomorrow night in Brooklyn at Moldover’s CD release party in Williamsburg Brooklyn tomorrow night. There will be a lot of good people there and if you haven’t seen Moldover’s stuff it is really worth a look at http://moldover.com/

I’ll be showing off the Ohm64 and our new controller that hasn’t even been announced, this is the first place to see it.

Here are the details

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